U.S. Watching Out for Radiation in Japanese Drugs, Food

Amid concerns stemming from the disaster at Japan’s Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, U.S. officials say that they will monitor medicine as well as food entering the country from Japan for radioactivity.

As reported by The Wall Street Journal, a spokeswoman with the Food and Drug Administration said that the agency will keep an eye on radiation levels in such products passing through, or originating in, Japan.

In Japan, authorities suspended some domestic shipments of spinach, rapeseed and raw milk following the detection of radiation. Japanese officials maintained, however, that the radiation levels in the tainted foods did not pose an immediate danger to the people consuming them.

“Experts agree that there is no health impact by consuming these food items on a few occasions, so we ask that people respond calmly without reacting excessively,” said Chief Cabinet Secretary Yukio Edano, according to the Journal.

Food from Japan amounts to 4 percent of overall of food imports into the U.S. The proportion of drug imports from Japan is likewise very small.

However, some experts, such as Peter Caracappa, a nuclear engineering professor at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, have told the Journal that any consumption of radioactive material is associated with a higher risk of cancer.

U.S. authorities also confirmed that the radiation plume from the Fukushima plant has made its way to this country, though, according The New York Times, the Energy Department said that the “minuscule quantities” of radiation posed no health threat.

Separately, state and federal officials are calling for thorough safety reviews of the two nuclear power plants in earthquake-prone California. “The fundamental question is whether these facilities should be located next to active faults and whether they are operated safely,” State Sen. Sam Blakeslee, R-San Luis Obispo, told the Los Angeles Times.

Related Posts:
Concerns Grow About Radiation Contamination of Japanese Food
Safety Review to Evaluate U.S. Nuclear Power Plants
Experts Weigh Public Health Threat From Japanese Reactors’ Radiation

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